Grim Discovery About Ebola Virus

A new study found that the highly infectious Ebola virus is harder to get rid of once a person has been infected. Men are particularly vulnerable because the virus could survive in the semen 2 years after recovery.

According to UNC infectious diseases professor David A. Wohl, M.D., who is also the study’s co-author, the devastating Ebola outbreak in West Africa allowed scientists to understand more about the virus, “including the potential persistence of the virus in certain compartments of the body, such as the genital tract.”

Ebola virus is transmitted by exposure to infected fluids, including blood, vomit, and semen.

Ebola virus survives for two years in the semen of infection survivors

(Natural News) Researchers at the University of North Carolina (UNC) at Chapel Hill have recently discovered that the Ebola virus ribonucleic acid (RNA) remains in the semen of Ebola survivors even after two years of recovery.

In a study that was published on Saturday, July 22 in Open Forum Infectious Diseases, researchers found out that even after two years of having been Ebola-free, male Ebola survivors’ semen can still contain traces of the Ebola virus RNA, prompting a suggestion to revise the 2016 World Health Organization (WHO) guideline of abstaining from sexual intercourse for at least a year for the Ebola survivors.

The study analyzed semen samples from 149 men who recovered from the virus up to almost three years earlier. It showed that 13 men tested positive for Ebola virus RNA; 11 of these men tested positive even after two years of the onset of the Ebola virus; and one of the 11 men tested positive even after being found negative for the virus at least two times.

“Our finding of long-term persistence and intermittent detection of viral RNA in semen suggests we need to change how we think about Ebola as it is no longer only an acute illness, but also one with potential long-term effects,” said the study’s co-author and UNC division of pulmonary and critical care medicine assistant professor William A. Fischer II, M.D.

The researchers said the resurgence of the infection could possibly be attributed to a possibility that the Ebola virus may have hidden in certain areas of the body that remain undetected by the immune system, such as the eye and the testes.

As such, the men who were found to have remnants of the Ebola virus RNA in their semen complained of suffering from eye problems at a higher rate than male Ebola survivors who were found to not have a trace of Ebola virus RNA left in their semen.